By recognizing Israeli sovereignty in the Golan Heights, President Trump struck a blow against the idiotic principle of “land for peace,” when he tweeted,
After 52 years it is time for the United States to fully recognize Israel’s Sovereignty over the Golan Heights, which is of critical strategic and security importance to the State of Israel and Regional Stability!
Restoring land to the previous owner, in this case, would work against the possibility of peace, he implied. And of course he’s right.
But doesn’t annexation violate international law? Opinions differ. It’s true that it is illegal under the UN charter to obtain land by attacking or threatening to attack another country. Art. 2, Sect. 4, says,
All Members shall refrain in their international relations from the threat or use of force against the territorial integrity or political independence of any state, or in any other manner inconsistent with the Purposes of the United Nations.
At the same time, the right of all nations, even Jewish ones, to defend themselves is also clear (Art. 51):
Nothing in the present Charter shall impair the inherent right of individual or collective self-defence if an armed attack occurs against a Member of the United Nations, until the Security Council has taken measures necessary to maintain international peace and security. …
Although the first shots in the 1967 war were fired by Israel, even the US State Department considered it a “clear-cut case of military preemption” [of an imminent attack], which is tantamount to self-defense. Hence Israel’s occupation of the Golan was legal.
In 1981, Israel went a step further and passed a law to applying Israeli law and jurisdiction to the Golan. In response, the UN Security Council passed its Resolution 497, calling the decision “null and void” and “demanding” that Israel continue to treat the area as occupied territory. This resolution was not explicitly passed under Chapter VII of the UN Charter, and so is not considered binding. Israel ignored it.
So what is the status today? The 1981 Golan Law deliberately did not use the word “sovereignty” or its equivalent, and the Foreign Ministry stressed that fact at the time, perhaps worried that the UN would act more strongly against Israel if it did. No other countries recognized a change in the status of the area. In 2016, PM Netanyahu announced that “Israel will never come down from the Golan Heights.”
Although as we’ve seen, the right of self-defense is enshrined in international law, it comes from the most fundamental concept of human rights, what traditionally has been called natural law. No one or no nation is obliged to sit quietly while being attacked. And I think that this principle overrides any other rules or laws. The geostrategic significance of the Golan makes it essential. We are not obligated to voluntarily give up our lives or our nation, and we are not obligated to leave the Golan.
Nevertheless, Israel hasn’t yet officially claimed sovereignty, and probably few if any nations other than the US would recognize it if she did. On the other hand, Israel will not give it up, so it makes no sense to continue pretending that it is not an integral part of the country. Formal annexation, followed by official recognition from the US and maybe a few other countries will have little practical significance today, but it will set the stage for the future.
And one of the future events that we should be trying very hard to make a reality is the demise of the “land for peace” concept. Possibly we are so used to it that we don’t find it exceptional, but consider the history: several aggressor nations attempt to destroy another country, but are soundly defeated. In times past – you don’t have to go farther back than 1945 – their military capabilities would have been destroyed, their assets stripped, and their capitals ravaged. Instead, after 1967 (and again after the Arabs had their second go at Israel in 1973), the international community stepped in, saved the losers from total defeat, forced the winner to retreat, and began a “peace process” to return the situation to the status quo ante that is still going on, 52 years later. And the slogan of that process is “land for peace,” or, in other words, the territory gained by the blood of the victims of aggression is to be given back to the aggressors, in return for an easily broken promise that is impossible to guarantee!
The international community took the side of the aggressors for several reasons. One of them was their possession of much of the world’s energy supply and the efficacy of the Arab oil weapon. Today the situation has changed, with much more oil available in North America, and even natural gas in the hands of Israel. Another important factor was the Cold War, with the Soviet Union and the US lining up behind the Arabs and Israel, respectively. The Cold War has ended, although the rivalry between the US and Russia still exists, albeit in a much more complicated reality.
So why is the “process” still going on? It has to do with the identity of the small state that defeated the aggressors. The small Jewish state. There is a confluence of interests, based on a combination of Muslim opposition to a corner of Dar-al-Islambeing ruled by non-Muslims, and European antipathy to their oldest enemy, the Jewish people. Both of these themes – Muslim and European antisemitism – were carefully nurtured by Soviet psychological warfare experts. The concept of the oppressed “Palestinian people” was invented, which worked in both the eastern and western theaters. In the West, Palestinian human rights were stressed, and in the East, Arab/Muslim honor.
The Western Left, still animated by the ancient strings put in place by Stalin’s experts, didn’t disappoint. European Jew-hatred, undercover since the Holocaust, came out again in the form of anti-Zionism. In America (and even Israel), academics pointlessly employed in scam fake-academic disciplines like Gender Studies found a cause that they could sink their teeth into. A whole religion of anti-Israelism emerged, with every university establishing its church of Palestine solidarity and observing Apartheid Week, passing BDS resolutions, and other manifestations of zeal.
In larger society, governments, politicians, religious and cultural organizations, and of course media, relentlessly pushed ideas like the “two-state solution,” “land for peace,” “disengagement,” and “separation,” concepts which sugar-coated their actual content: forcing Israel – the victorious party, remember – to concede land to her enemies so that the result of the 1967 war could be reversed, and ultimately the state destroyed.
In the US, the most anti-Israel administration ever, headed by Muslim Brotherhood fan Barack Obama came into power, and worked relentlessly to weaken the Jewish state in practical terms and to damage her image throughout the world. For the first time, the US purposely abstained on a significant anti-Israel resolution in the UN, and did its best to enable Israel’s greatest enemy, Iran, to ultimately achieve nuclear weapons. At the same time, it acted to restrain Israel from preemptively destroying Iran’s nuclear project, and provided an influx of cash, which Iran used to bolster its effective conquest of Iraq and Syria.
With the election of Donald Trump, and (ultimately) Trump’s appointment of pro-Israel officials to important positions in his administration, the situation has changed radically. While Israel’s enemies in the Muslim world continue to be hostile – although some of her traditional enemies have dialed back their hostility for pragmatic reasons – the US is finally firmly in Israel’s corner. Trump’s decision to recognize Israel’s sovereignty in the Golan is just the most recent of a series of actions to recognize the reality in the region: that Israel is here to stay, her capital is Jerusalem, and – most importantly – the paradigm of “land for peace” will no longer be pursued.
Israel captured the Golan Heights from Syria during the 1967 Six Day War and applied its sovereignty over the territory in 1981
This would be a great opportunity for Israel to become the second nation in the world, to recognize Israeli sovereignty over the Golan.
Do they have the guts to do so?
@ William Bilek:
I do not see that Hugo mentons “deep puzzlement” but I am assured it is there. On the other hand I AM expressing my deep puzzlement about this matter-see above. In each of these agreements the complete Balfour Declaration is deeply installed. As for the Anglo-American Treaty, It was formally and UNANIMOUSLY endorsed by both the Senate and Congress, as well as signed into Law by both President Harding -and after he suddenly died -his successor Calvin Coolidge.
Moreover, the 1922 British Mandate Instructions (which they dastardly ignored) were, long before it was granted, scrutinised by Woodrow Wilson, and completely approved- unofficially. And not to be ignored….except by the UN itself… The complete package of Irrevocable Agreements were accepted completely by the United Nations -as shown in their Article 80 of their Founding Charter.
Hugo knows all about this and has mentioned them several times.(just not this last time) In fact I believe that there s very little about this period that he doe not know….
@ Edgar G.:
“Why does not the Jewish State via its spokesmen and politicians, push under the noses of the Goyim who are trying to dispossess us….that the San Remo Conference -and everything that followed from it like the Mandate and Anglo-American Treaty, etc.-was and IS a stricltly valid Internatonal agreement to this very day..”
I share Hugo Schmidt-Fischer deep puzzlement on this issue. Does any one have any thoughts or responses to this question?
@ Hugo Schmidt-Fischer:
Everythng you say is very true. And the Rothschild purchase extended into what is now part of Damascus itelf also. But nobody says anything about that, let alone acknowledge that it is Jewish property by purchase.
Another thing has always bothered me. Why does not the Jewish State via its spokesmen and politicians, push under the noses of the Goyim who are trying to dispossess us….that the San Remo Conference -and everything that followed from it like the Mandate and Anglo-American Treaty, etc.-was and IS a stricltly valid Internatonal agreement to this very day..
Do Israeli and Diaspora Jews have such short memories….?? Or are they-maybe- afraid that t’s true….??
@ Edgar G.:
Indeed, let us only hope this one step forward does not augur two steps backward.
The Syrians have no credible claim to the Golan Heights.
The old pre-1967 de-facto border between Israel and Syria consisted of a demarcation line, based on the armistice agreement.
The Arabs made a point to say they do not recognize the border as bestowing legal territorial status. It was just a temporary lull, a hudna, in their never ending quest of warfare against the infidels in dar el harb.
Thus Syria cannot claim anything when Israel moved the land posts in 1967.
Besides, the Golan was part of the land mass reconfirmed as Jewish homeland in the famous San Remo convention.
And indeed, the Rothschild family financed the purchase of vast land holdings on behalf of Jewish farmers in the Golan area, some still inaccessible across the border within present day Syria.
I’ve always had a sneaking feeling that the Jerusalem move and now the Golan move which mean really nothing to the US in any terms, ether politically or economically -especially since they are long since a fait accomplit, and quite legal anyway- are a part of a softening up of Israel so that the “Peace Plan” will be accepted -although it will have swingeing clauses.
Just a feelng ……nothing else…
The Druze who need/want to be Syrians can take a lump sum pension from Israel, close their bank accounts, say by by modern health care, hello yesterday and enjoy a new 2020 caddy donkey.